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Everything posted by Tripredacus
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Stay on topic or fare thee well.
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I have an R61 which is a bit different than the T60 that I am in the process of setting up to be my secondary notebook. It will have Windows XP Pro SP3 x86 with RAM Overlay, and I also want to see if I can dual-boot it with a Windows PE v10. The reasoning I figured to have an XP system is specifically due to the inability of modern OSes to connect to certain websites that use old TLS or sunsetted certficiations, such as what you would find in older network hardware. With the RAM overlay, it would be "safe" to use this XP system on the modern internet. Here is a post that compares the model you talk about and the one I have: Ref: https://forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.php?p=625145&sid=2275748362f2f4a630518fb0e8bbc120#p625145 The only real downside I currently can feel with this notebook is the weight. Since my notebook bag has this Thinkpad, as well as the MSI MS-163K and a wireless router in it, in addition to the three power bricks and whatever else is in there, it is quite heavy to be lugging around.
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How much do you pay for your internet?
Tripredacus replied to Jaguarek62's topic in General Discussion
This post reminds me of a strange (business) decision that my local ISP which is a cable company has taken up. Having had worked within the system in the past (but not the current company) I have some additional insight into how it works. For the cable modem that is given, the "speed" that the modem can attain is defined by a QoS Template applied by the CMTS. The ISP has a list of templates supported by each modem type (normally depending on DOCSIS standard) that matches the service plans that they offer to residential or corporate accounts. Info on QoS here: https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/cable/cmts/config_guide/b_cmts_Quality_Service_Features/b_cmts_Quality_Service_Features_chapter_010.html#con_1060803 Now to consider this situation, which may sound familiar to anyone with a cable internet subscription. The fact that the current offerings by your ISP do not match the plan that you currently have. For example your ISP offers 100/500/1000 options, but you are currently paying for 10 or 20. The company does not remove a QoS Template once they stop offering the service, otherwise your modem would either not work or you would be getting a speed different than what you signed up for. This was the situation that I was in a couple years ago. I was paying $70 for 20/1 and I called up the ISP to see if I could get 30/10. The minimum I could get was 100/10. A person may think then, how could I only get 20 if the minimum is 100? Well, that QoS Template applied to your modem is still active, and they do not go through any sort of effort to balance out the speeds when service plans cease to be offered but continue to be billed. And the reason for this is highlighted in a previous post: Comcast is a cable ISP as well, and the cable system still runs under the original design of sharing bandwidth. The reasons why the speeds can change at different times is based upon node utilization. The node is typically going to be limited to the geographical area that is connected to the Head End branch location. Someone or a group of someones are utilizing more traffic than usual, so the speed will decrease for everyone else. These days are different than when I worked at a cable company, modems nowadays are using data compression to push these large (over 50 Mbps) speeds. The slowdowns are miniscule when a higher priority connection is using more bandwidth than usual, due to the compression. Most people would notice a change in download speed on this type of network, but IIRC there is some mathematical formula that relates to upload and download speed, and what determined what the upload speed can be besides what the QoS on the modem says it is. -
"AntiMalware Service Executable" JUST WON'T GO
Tripredacus replied to ElectroLion's topic in Windows 10
There are various ways you can block MsMpEng.exe from even opening, have you tried anything relating to that? For example, using the DisallowRun registry key. -
Where (exactly) is the Windows 10 (and/or Windows 7) "line" (64 bit) ?
Tripredacus replied to jaclaz's topic in Windows 10
My own personal thoughts on internet-only PCs with 64-bit Windows are these minumums: 2 core 2 GHz 8 GB RAM SSD or 7200rpm HDD, 80 GB Now for maximums, yes a regular person buying a PC just for internet isn't going to actually make use of a CPU with more than 4 real or fake cores. They would see a difference between 8 GB and 16 GB RAM on a 7200rpm disk but likely not on an SSD. -
I have a different question and perhaps I am just mixing up terms. Would this allow DOS to boot in UEFI?
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It is worthwhile to point out that the "Capacitor Plague" was a current issue, where failures were occurring within the warranty period of the hardware. Most computers will get a 1 year warranty, while volume orders can potentially get up to three years depending on the manufacturer. This is not relating to the fact that capacitors can and do wear out, or that any computer (or electronic device) with a failed capacitor today is any way related to that situation. The unfortunate thing about this is that while the actual brands and models of capacitors have likely been identified, it would be impossible to know what computers or devices they were used in. This is because capacitors are typically one of the components that are not locked in to a particular PCB design, and that the manufacturer will change the ones they are using based on pricing and availability. This is why you can end up finding motherboards or video cards of the same hardware revision using different components. So if x capacitor is identified as potentially being faulty, and it is found in x board, another of x board may not have it. Since the issue was from back then it stands to reason that there would be a greater risk of coming across an board with these bad capacitors if it is purchased as new or NoS, still sealed boxed retail or tray/bulk. A used board or computer is not likely to have this particular failure because if it were using the faulty components, it would have failed by now. But that doesn't mean that it would be worry free, as capacitors can go bad for other reasons besides manufacturing defect.
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I have a feeling that there are already versions (or builds) that have been lost due to MS using a "live system" of updates. And while there may well be computers with those builds that never got updated, the installation media may not have been preserved. This is even more the case since MS doesn't mail pressed discs to Partners anymore, not even in the Embedded/IoT Channel. The last pressed disc I got from Microsoft was the IoT Enterprise 2015 LTSB kit. Everything after that has been download only, and since the files online can and do get changed by MS, I am certain some things have been "lost."
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How much do you pay for your internet?
Tripredacus replied to Jaguarek62's topic in General Discussion
I do not have a data cap on my service, no. It is cable and and I do not believe any cable companies have data caps on residential accounts, or at least they didn't when I was in that industry. -
You can change the default web browser that the OS uses, but may have to deal with other browsers always asking to be default. This will not help if the program you are using is not making a generic request to the OS, aka it is hard coded to launch a particular web browser.
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end useres licence agreement
Tripredacus replied to wbthehero@gmail.com's topic in Windows 2000/2003/NT4
Do not multipost. Keep to this topic instead: https://msfn.org/board/topic/70814-end-user-licence-eula-missing/ -
How much do you pay for your internet?
Tripredacus replied to Jaguarek62's topic in General Discussion
100/20 (avg 94/18) $45 (promo rate, will go to $70 in a year) -
Edited above posts to remove the name of the OS that was mentioned. It is advertisement of a particular warez release that is at issue. We do not really care what you use on your computers, but the topics cannot be discussed here. In addition, that user had put an illegal avatar on their account. Now, no more discussion of this in this topic. If you want to follow up, you can PM a mod or post in the Site & Forum issues.
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Alternatively, you could use something that can edit PDFs, such as Gimp. I do not know if the versions of Gimp that work with XP can edit PDFs.
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Today I learned one of the dumbest design decisions I have ever seen in a commercial product. If for whatever reason you account becomes disconnected in MS Teams, you cannot minimize the Teams window unless you log in. Fortunately, you can close the window without logging in.
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First batch to run through of testing out drives from my stock pile. After all the years of adding used disks to my collection, this is the first time running through them. Good disks: (PO/POH) - WD Caviar WD102 10.2 GB - Maxtor 90320D2 3.2 GB (182/35763?) loud access - Maxtor 91531U3 15 GB (6884/1665?) loud access Warning disks: (PO/POH) - Quantum Fireball Plus AS 20.5 GB (1764/30947?) Reallocated Sector Count 100 Bad disks: - Quantum Fireball CR 6.4 AT 6.4 GB (not detected in Windows) - Seagate ST32122A 2.111 GB (locks up during post) - WD Caviar WD200 20 GB (not detected in BIOS) - WD Caviar WD200 20 GB (clicks) - WD Caviar 307AA 30.7 GB (clicks) I'll update this post as I test more disks. So far only 3 disks I got that are good are too small. Not sure about that Allocated Sector Count disk... I've run disks that have that and I believe someone once told me that it was safe to ignore but do a backup-type thing. Also interesting in that batch is the Maxtor 91531U3 which has more power on times than power on hours. The question mark on the POH is just because it show up that way. It might be because I'm running my disk testing on Windows XP Home and perhaps the Crystal Disk Info doesn't work properly on that version. IDK. But I will have more disk to test out so I can hopefully find a good 20 or 30 GB IDE drive to use. And too bad about that WD 307AA, 30.7 GB seems to be the perfect size for FAT32.
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This forum is based in Europe, sometimes routing through Germany. As such images of WWII-based German military uniforms are not allowed to be displayed. Hope someone can use that info you found about Chrome.
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It is a limitation of FAT32 within Windows, so you are right on that and I didn't think to remember it. Especially since I had to figure that out in order to deploy DOS images via WDS. I shouldn't have a problem of finding another 20 GB disk to clone to, but my stash of disks is untested. So that project of a) finding a valid disk and b) archiving relevant data may take some time to accomplish. I would end up using Ghost to copy the disk.
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Super bump. Shiva has not been used since this last post, and has been sitting in a corner collecting dust in a gaudy chassis that has no side panel. I have put together a new system that I was going to use for a specific purpose (as with everything) and then I had thought that the purpose is parallel to Shiva. Now when I'm talking about Shiva, I'm talking specifically about the HDD with the OS on it, not particularly the hardware. I am going to clone the disk to another, to boot it in the new computer, to see if a transition is possible. If it is, it would be the 4th board the OS has been on. The first question is what the maximum disk size is that I can clone and extend to that will work with Windows 98 FE? Shiva currently lives on a 20 GB IDE disk, and the disk in the new system is 250 GB, which I presume is too large.
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Office 2016 can be either x86 or x64, it depends on which way it is installed.
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Can't let a good trademark go to waste.
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How to tell if VSS is enabled on an offline disk?
Tripredacus replied to Tripredacus's topic in Windows 10
While there has been some inroads recently, MS builds products for (and licenses them appropriately) for a world where only supported Microsoft products exist. They had previously planned to release a feature into WDS for Server 2012 that could do whole disk imaging but to my knowledge it was not released then. I remember being at a presentation where it was talked about and I asked the presenter if it could be used to image Linux disks on WDS. He said he did not know but it was not supported. -
Is it the old Edge or the Chromium Edge?
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Or you post an image hosted on a site with a bad cert.